Glace de Viande (Meat glaze)

Total Time
14 hours, plus overnight refrigeration
Rating
4(12)
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Ingredients

  • 10 to 15pounds meat scraps, bones and fat. (See note 1)
  • 2large onions, sliced
  • 2large carrots, peeled and sliced
  • 2large ribs celery, cut up
  • 6sprigs parsley
  • teaspoon thyme
  • ¼teaspoon savory
  • 2bay leaves
  • 12whole peppercorns
  • Cold water
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (24 servings)

317 calories; 11 grams fat; 5 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 6 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 3 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 1 gram sugars; 51 grams protein; 195 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Day I

    1. Step 1

      Rinse the bones and scraps, put them in a roasting pan and roast them at 375 degrees for an hour or so, turning them over occasionally to brown on all sides. Add the onions and carrots and roast a halfhour more, or until they, too, are brown (but not black).

    2. Step 2

      Transfer the contents from the roasting pan to a large stockpot (about 20 quarts). Rinse the pan carefully several times. Scraping to loosen the caramelized particles. Add the water from each rinsing to the stockpot. Then add all the remaining ingredients and cover everything with cold water to a depth of one inch. Do not add any salt.

    3. Step 3

      Cover the stockpot, bring it to a boil slowly, reduce it to a simmer and cook it for 4 hours. At the end, strain off the broth into a deep pot (about 12 quarts), using a chinois or an ordinary strainer lined with damp cheesecloth. Cool quickly and refrigerate overnight. Discard the solids - or feed them to the pets.

  2. Day Ii

    1. Step 4

      In the morning, remove the hardened cake of fat from the top of the broth, leaving no particles behind. Discard the fat - or save it for french frying.

    2. Step 5

      Bring the broth to a boil and boil it down, uncovered, over high heat until it is reduced to about a pint of viscous, brown syrup. Depending on your stove, the process will take from one to two hours, approximately. (See note 2)

    3. Step 6

      Pour the syrup into a clean ice cube tray (with the dividers removed) and put in the refrigerator, not the freezer, for six hours or more.

    4. Step 7

      Remove the meat glaze from the tray by prying up one end and pulling it out (it will come away cleanly). Cut it into three strips lengthwise and into cubes crosswise. Bag the cubes in plastic and store them in the freezer till needed.

Tips
  • Use any and all bones and scraps, fat or lean, cooked or raw, from beef, veal, chicken or pork. Beef should predominate, and knuckle bones yield lots of gelatin, but you can achieve decent meat glaze with 15 pounds of almost anything. Do not, however, use cured meats (too salty), lamb (too strong), smoked meats (too pronounced) or (as far as I'm concerned) even turkey (duck and goose are all right). It is possible, of course, to go out and buy 15 pounds of beef and veal bones and make superb meat glaze. But it is unnecessary. Simply keep a meat glaze scrap bag in your freezer and add all relevant leavings until you have accumulated enough for a batch.
  • In boiling down the broth, you will find that it goes through four stages. In the first, it simply bubbles at its own level like any other soup. In the second, however, it becomes viscous enough to make a ''head'' of fine froth that will rise precipitately and possibly overflow the pot. During this stage, therefore, keep an eye on it. The third stage is reached when the broth becomes more viscous still and makes rather larger bubbles that do not rise so high. And in the last stage, the ''head'' disappears, the bubbles become very viscous indeed, and the danger of boiling over is replaced by the danger of boiling dry. Needless to say, through all the stages, the level of the liquid goes down, the salinity goes up, the color deepens and the flavor grows more rich.

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Comments

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This is miraculous stuff. My favorite use is a steak sauce: sauté some shallots after cooking the steak and add a cube in the pan with wine and rosemary l and boil it down, and swirl in a pat of butter off the heat if you want to get indulgent

Always worth the time to make and store a Glace de Viande. It will enhance so many meals, and this was a fine recipe from leftover meat ingredients. A little hard to find Savory herb by me, but eventually succeeded.

i may have boiled it a bit too long. i was waiting for the syrupy viscousness. however, i had about a pint left in the pan, and after pouring it into the container, i could them smell and appreciate this labor of love. i can't wait to use it. tbc....

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